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The Last Letter from Your Lover

The Last Letter from Your Lover

Titel: The Last Letter from Your Lover Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jojo Moyes
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work it all out. Nothing makes any sense.’
    ‘That afternoon, four years ago, were you in the car with Felipe?’
    ‘Felipe?’ She looked blank.
    ‘My friend from Alberto’s. He died around the time I left, in a car crash. I looked up the cuttings this morning. There’s a reference to an unnamed woman passenger. It’s the only way I can explain it.’
    ‘I don’t know. As I said yesterday, there are still bits I can’t remember. If I hadn’t found your letters, I might never have remembered you. I might never have known—’
    ‘But who told you I was dead?’
    ‘Laurence. Don’t look like that. He’s not cruel. I think he really believed you were.’ She waited a moment. ‘He knew there was . . . someone, you see. He read your last letter. After the accident he must have put two and two—’
    ‘My last letter?’
    ‘The one asking me to meet you at the station. I was carrying it when the car crashed.’
    ‘I don’t understand – that wasn’t my last letter—’
    ‘Oh, let’s not,’ she interrupted. ‘Please . . . It’s too—’
    ‘Then what?’
    She was watching him intently. ‘Jennifer, I—’
    She stepped so close to him that even in the dim light he could see every tiny freckle on her face, each eyelash tapering into a black point sharp enough to pierce a man’s heart. She was with him and yet removed, as if she was coming to some decision.
    ‘Boot,’ she said softly, ‘are you angry with me? Still?’
    Boot.
    He swallowed. ‘How could I be?’
    She lifted her hands and traced the shape of his face, her fingertips so light they barely touched him. ‘Did we do this?’
    He stared at her.
    ‘Before?’ She blinked. ‘I don’t remember. I only know your words.’
    ‘Yes.’ His voice broke. ‘Yes we did this.’ He felt her cool fingers on his skin and remembered her scent.
    ‘Anthony,’ she murmured, and there was sweetness in the way she said his name, an unbearable tenderness that spoke of all the love and loss he, too, had felt.
    Her body rested against his and he heard the sigh that travelled through her, then felt her breath on his lips. The air stilled around them. Her lips were on his, and something broke open in his chest. He heard himself gasp, and realised, with horror, that his eyes had filled with tears. ‘I’m sorry,’ he whispered, mortified. ‘I’m sorry. I don’t know . . . why . . .’
    ‘I know,’ she said. ‘I know.’ She put her arms around his neck, kissing the tears that ran down his cheeks, murmuring to him. They clung together, elated, despairing, neither quite able to believe the turn of events. Time became a blur, the kisses more urgent, the tears drying. He pulled her sweater over her head, stood, almost helpless, as she undid the buttons of his shirt. And in a joyful wrench it was off him, his skin against hers, and they were on the bed, wrapped around each other, their bodies fierce, almost clumsy with urgency.
    He kissed her, and knew he was trying to tell her the depth of how he felt. Even as he lost himself in her, felt her hair sweep across his face, his chest, her lips meet his skin, her fingers, he understood that there were people for whom one other was their missing part.
    She was alive beneath him; she set him alight. He kissed the scar that ran up to her shoulder, ignored her flinching reluctance until she accepted what he was telling her: this silvered ridge was beautiful to him; it told him she had loved him. It told him she had wanted to come to him. He kissed it because there was no part of her that he didn’t want to make better, no part of her that he didn’t adore.
    He watched desire grow in her as if it were a gift shared between them, the infinite variety of expressions that crossed her face, saw her unguarded, locked in some private struggle, and when she opened her eyes, he felt blessed.
    When he came he wept again, because some part of him had always known, even though he had chosen not to believe it, that there must be something that could make you feel like this. And that to have it returned to him was more than he could have hoped for.
    ‘I know you,’ she murmured, her skin sticky against his, her tears wet on his neck. ‘I do know you.’
    For a moment he couldn’t speak but stared up at the ceiling, feeling the air cool around them, her limbs pressed damply against his own. ‘Oh, Jenny,’ he said. ‘Thank God.’
    When her breathing had returned to normal, she raised herself on one

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